THE final vouchers and hampers will be delivered to victims of the collapsed Farepak savings club this week.

But families who lost money say they will fight to get all of their money returned.

The vouchers - worth around 15p for every é1 lost - are to be distributed to up to 150,000 victims by around 25,000 agents. They are being followed by 19,000 grocery hampers which customers had already paid for when Farepak went into administration in October.

But the victims, who lost an average é400 each, are still facing a lean Christmas.

Louise McDaid, of the Ayrshire-based Farepak Victims Committee, received é70 in vouchers last week after losing é400 of her savings.

But Louise, 42, a mother of two, from West Kilbride, said the fund's "goodwill gesture" fell far short of what the victims were owed.

She said: "We want those responsible held accountable. This government and previous governments should have had this industry regulated."

The é6.8m worth of vouchers were paid for by an emergency response fund set up amid public outcry at the firm's collapse.

The Department of Trade and Industry, the Financial Services Authority and the Office of Fair Trading are all investigating the Farepak collapse.